Explore All Archives

Items in the archive are listed below. Narrow your results at left, or enter a search query below to find a collecting organization,
collection, site, specific URL or to search the text of archived webpages.

Our mission is to capture the public perception of the Mars rovers on their 10th anniversary, and to preserve and provide access to that information for future research.We will collect web pages that address the Mars rovers from three different perspectives on their 10th anniversary, and to preserve and provide access to that information for future research. Official government websites will provide the control information: what was officially released regarding the past ten years exploring Mars. As a counterpoint, we will also capture the popular news and science media’s relation of these events as well as the fringe (conspiracy theorizing, alien spotting and so on) perspectives and reactions.

Rights:
This collection is made accessible to the public without restriction. The University of Michigan School of Information and Archive-It do not own copyright to these materials; contact the copyright holders for further information.
,
All materials in this collection are either government-created or have been archived under a claim of fair use for educational and research purposes. If you are the copyright holder to any of these materials and have comments or objections as to its use here, please contact any of the collectors and we'll be happy to discuss your concerns.

This collection documents Baylor University’s eleven schools and colleges as well as the libraries, centers, institutes, museums, special programs, and offices involved in academic curriculum and opportunities on campus.

A collection of diverse resources on different forms of alternative energy, aimed at a lay audience of high school students and adults who want to acquaint themselves with the current state of that field.

The Apopka Farmworkers Collection documents the health crisis resulting from area farmworkers' exposure to pesticides used in farming, and from exposure to environmental contaminants from nearby sites, around Lake Apopka in Central Florida. Farming in the area began in the 1940s and ended in 1998.

The mission of the Oklahoma Archeological Survey is to research Oklahoma's archeological record; to work with state and federal agencies; and the citizens of Oklahoma to preserve significant archeological sites; and to disseminate information about Oklahoma's cultural heritage through publications and presentations.

The collection archives the websites of the Pan Am Historical Foundation, World Wings International and the Clipper Pioneers. These organizations were founded by former employees of Pan American World Airways, Inc. (1927-1991) to preserve the history of the airline. The company was a pioneer in international air travel, the development of aviation equipment, air routes, commercial passenger service, navigation techniques, and communication systems.

The Oklahoma Biological Survey is both a research unit of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Oklahoma and a state office. Our purpose is to gather, analyze and disseminate information regarding animal and plant forms and ecological communities within the state and associated geographical areas. In addition to scholarly research and publication, we provide information to citizens, organizations, businesses, and agencies concerning Oklahoma's biota, and we assist in the protection and preservation of the natural heritage of Oklahoma. Our faculty and staff also teach and provide hands-on training to students at the University.

Collection of web sites created at Michigan State University and the University of Wisconsin. One site web site provides browsers with images and information from one of the world's largest collection of well-preserved, sectioned and stained brains of mammals. Viewers can see and download photographs of brains of over 100 different species of mammals (including humans) representing over 20 Mammalian Orders. The other site provides a world resource for illustrations of whole brains and stained sections from a great variety of mammals.

Rights:
Educational use only, no other permissions given. Copyright to this resource is held by Michigan State University and is provided here for educational purposes. It may not be reproduced or distributed in any format without written permission.

Websites documenting the life and career of Carl Djerassi. University research scientist and industrialist, Djerassi is most famous for synthesizing the first oral contraceptive. Born in Vienna, Austria, in 1923, he emigrated to the United States in 1939. He received his B.A. in 1942 from Kenyon College and worked briefly with the Ciba Phamaceutical Company before receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He taught at Wayne State University in Detroit and worked at the pharmaceutical company Syntex in Mexico before joining the Stanford faculty as Professor of Chemistry in 1959. He is the author of over 1100 articles, seven books on scientific subjects, and several novels; his awards include the National Medal of Science, the Priestly Medal, the first Wolf Prize in Chemistry, and the National Medal of Technology.

The Census of Marine Life is a global network of researchers in more than 80 nations engaged in a 10-year scientific initiative to assess and explain the diversity, distribution, and abundance of life in the oceans.

Nicole Baran, MSW, is the Executive Director and Founder of the Center for Relationship Abuse Awareness. She has been dedicated to the movement to end gender-based violence since 2000, working both as an advocate with survivors of domestic violence and at the policy level for systemic change. Nicole has conducted national trainings and contributed to publications to improve the institutional response to domestic violence since 2001. She has delivered over 350 customized workshops, locally and nationwide, at organizations such as Kaiser Permanente, the San Francisco Bar Association, and California’s State Domestic Violence Coalition. Nicole has been teaching in the Feminist Studies Program at Stanford University since 2007 after developing Violence Against Women: Theory, Issues and Prevention. In 2006, she successfully partnered with Stanford University to institutionalize a comprehensive response to gender-based violence on campus. She managed a five-year grant from the USDOJ Office on Violence Against Women and was instrumental in implementing Stanford’s first Office on Sexual Assault and Relationship Abuse. Nicole received her BA and MA in English from Stanford University and a Masters in Social Work from Washington University in St. Louis, with a specialization in management and a focus on women’s rights. Nicole Baran is also the Executive Director of the Peggy and Jack Baskin Foundation which funds innovative strategies for eliminating obstacles facing marginalized populations, with an emphasis on empowering women and promoting educational equality. She established the infrastructure and direction of the Foundation and became the first Executive Director in 2009. Read Nicole’s oped in the Stanford Daily, Stanford Drops the Ball on Sexual Assault Case, interviews with Seneca International and Maestro Market or listen to the interview on Stanford Radio KZSU’s “Culture Lens”.

This is a collection of Intergovernmental and Non-governmental Organizations (IGOs and NGOs) that focus on the environmental policy of climate change and global warming. We're extremely interested -- for purely academic reasons -- in how this collection is being used and would be grateful if users would share that information with us. Please email James Jacobs, Government Information Librarian, at jrjacobs AT stanford DOT edu. User privacy is extremely important so of course any stories and personal information will be kept strictly confidential.

The Oklahoma Climatological Survey was established by the State Legislature in 1980 to provide climatological services to the people of Oklahoma. The Survey maintains an extensive array of climatological information, operates the Oklahoma Mesonet, and hosts a wide variety of educational outreach and scientific research projects.

Document and preserve the progress of the Clinical Translational Science Award websites http://www.ctsaweb.org/. The CTSA provides full-text search of the Consortium’s information including documents, projects, and media content within the individual websites. The sites that are currently available for capturing from the consortium include 47 institutions located in the United States.

The Commonwealth Fund is a private foundation that aims to promote a high performing health care system that achieves better access, improved quality, and greater efficiency, particularly for society's most vulnerable.

This collection includes social media pages and other websites related to the ethics issues explored in the 2015 alternate reality game DUST. Some archived websites for this collection were chosen because they provide contextual information about issues of ethics, long-term thinking, astrobiology, scientific integrity, access to information, genetics, bioethics, and women in science.

The Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections is Cornell’s principal repository of rare books, manuscripts, and archival materials. The Division holds over 500,000 printed volumes, more than 80 million manuscripts, and another million photographs, paintings, prints, and other visual media. Among these are particularly strong collections of early photography, the history of science, human sexuality, witchcraft, the French Revolution, the Civil War and the abolitionist movement, Dante and Petrarch, Icelandic history and literature, urban planning, new media art, and musical movements such as Hip Hop and punk. The Division is also home to Cornell University’s Archives.

Drug Policy online archives. Due to their unfortunately illegal status, and the attitudes of governments, some of the best information about drugs is only available online. This archive collects information about drug policy from around the Internet.

Throughout this website, you will find research, regulations, updates and news items related to Oklahoma’s recent earthquakes. We hope you find this website to be a meaningful resource for information related to the current situation and our state government’s collective response.

The Ebola virus had a major outbreak in West Africa, with an estimated 22,159 cases and 8,844 deaths reported. The virus then spread outside Africa, but it only affected a few individuals. This collection aims to document the spread of the virus and the cases resulting from it.

An archive of digital government and non-government organization (NGO) documents and reports, representing the Greater Everglades watershed and adjacent ecosystems, including areas north of Lake Okeechobee (The North Everglades) and south of the peninsula, including Florida Bay, the Florida Keys, and the various adjacent national parks. Material includes sound recordings, pamphlets, books, photos, art, curriculum material, government reports, theses and dissertations, scientific data sets, and more.

An archive of digital maps representing the Greater Everglades watershed and adjacent ecosystems, including areas north of Lake Okeechobee (The North Everglades) and south of the peninsula, including Florida Bay, the Florida Keys, and the various adjacent national parks

This collection is designed to collect publications from those federal agencies who publish fugitive documents -- those documents that should be part of the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP) but are not distributed to libraries because the agencies are not sending their publications to the Government Printing Office (GPO) for distribution to FDLP libraries.

An archive of websites related to the prestigious Fulbright Exchange Program, including sites for the Fulbright commissions, administering agencies, and leading Fulbright alumni organizations. The archive was established by the Fulbright Academy of Science & Technology, a global Fulbright alumni organization.

Oklahoma's state agencies have been interested in geographic information system (GIS) technology since the late 1980's. In 1994 the Oklahoma Legislature passed and the Governor signed a bill that authorized the Oklahoma Conservation Commission to prepare a Strategy for Developing a GIS for the State of Oklahoma and created the State GIS Council to assist the Conservation Commission in this project.

The Oklahoma Geological Survey is a state agency for research and public service located on the Norman Campus of the University of Oklahoma and affiliated with the OU College of Earth and Energy. The Survey is chartered in the Oklahoma Constitution and is charged with investigating the state's land, water, mineral, and energy resources and disseminating the results of those investigations to promote the wise use of Oklahoma's natural resources consistent with sound environmental practices.

These web sites are meant to be educational, but also humanitarian. EHS students are very interested in ending world hunger and regularly use Free Rice.Com EHS students were also involved in the Haitian relief fund through churches, clubs and the Red Cross.

For a number of years, the citizens of New York State have engaged in a rich debate concerning the prospect of hydraulic fracturing in the Marcellus Shale. While some of the discussion and events have been captured by news outlets, much of the information is appearing on web sites and social media. Unfortunately, web sites disappear over time and important content can vanish. To ensure that this important trove of information is available to future generations of scholars, the Cornell University Library is creating a permanent archive of the web sites concerned with the issue of hydraulic fracturing in New York.

Rights:
Copyright for the materials in this collection is not held by the Internet Archive or the University of Michigan School of Information.
Individuals wishing to reproduce or use this information should contact the individual copyright holders.

The Region of Waterloo Archives is the official archives of the Kitchener-Waterloo Field Naturalists (KWFN). The KWFN acquire and disseminate knowledge of natural history, protect and preserve wildlife, purchase and hold appropriate parcels of land for the advancement of conservation, and support public interest in nature and its preservation. This is a collection of their website.

This archive is part of a University of New Mexico project that uses innovative technological solutions to build an easy to use knowledge base on energy policy and dialogue in Latin America for educational and policy-oriented research interests in the United States, Latin America, and the world.

In November 2012 Colorado voters passed Amendment 64, which legalized the sale and personal use of marijuana within the state. The debate taking place in Colorado represents a microcosm of the national discourse on the legalization of marijuana. This collection will focus on the passing and aftermath of Colorado’s Amendment 64 and will be limited to sources from 2012 and later. This collection seeks to represent the wide array of opinions by selecting websites from each side of the debate. It is intended to be an educational tool for governments, students, and other researchers.

How will technology, social networking, entertainment and diseases be different in the future? Will things like diabetes and cancer be cured? Will iPhones still be popular? Will we still care about the same celebrities?

A collection of web sites related to the administration of and services provided by Michigan State University. The collection will also include any sites within the msu.edu domain which includes many campus organizations, faculty and students.

Rights:
Educational use only, no other permissions given. Copyright to this resource is held by Michigan State University and is provided here for educational purposes. It may not be reproduced or distributed in any format without written permission.

The Center for the History of Medicine (CHoM) enables the history of medicine to inform contemporary medicine and deepens our understanding of the society in which medicine is embedded. Its activities, from public programs, exhibits, collection curation and development, academic endeavors, and research are directed to a diverse audience of health professionals, students and academic researchers, and the general public. One of the world's leading centers for the study of the history of health and medicine, CHoM attracts a global audience of researchers to its collections of rare books, journals, archives, manuscripts, photographs, prints, art, and artifact collections. This collection includes websites that are part of, or related to, the Center's manuscript collections.

Located in New York City, The Medical Center Archives is the repository for the NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital (NYPH), the Weill Medical College of Cornell University, the Weill Graduate School of Medical Sciences of Cornell University, and Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar. The Archives also holds the records for predecessor institutions of the Medical Center, as well as several hospitals that merged or affiliated with NYPH, and the records of the Cornell University-New York Hospital School of Nursing. In addition to institutional records, the Archives holds approximately 150 collections of papers and manuscripts from noted individuals associated with the institutions of the medical center. The collections comprise nearly 7,000 linear feet of papers, records, and images dating from 1771 to the present.